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HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Lucknow Sentinel, 1932-04-07, Page 2FA yi i.r Tnr ere- seeee ii a Free Trees For the' Asking.! TIM . ' Lone Scouts- •of- •Ontarl hev , recently co-operated with the Ontario Forestry Drench - of the Provincial. Government iii posting signs in_ pro- minent places throughout the province announcing to farmers and ,other he • terested person how they may secure a large numberof trees free Of charge,. for reforestation work, from the For- peace on the Scout Movement than on T estThe boys y Boys . armed hikes, arrangedworld: courts, 'Ives .the• 'declaration • of ; • with..the cards,.. a. hammer and tacks, • 4and ,posted these announcements prominent places Every year, arentitl"sfaei 24th, Feritne :20D BOY 'Scouts attend a special For-, • • estry •'Camp at Angus,.:Ontario, where thea are taught the rudiments '.of Fore estry bytaodereMent..OfficialSe- -ani$• Fire Prevention contest;. Class 1, .and. the._.C.3nedian Chamber et •Comrneree Shield. The .Scouts systematically in, spected alleys and back streets and re - Potted "fire hatards. 'World Courts and Bay'Scouts, That Scouting affered a great lesson, in neighborliness, and tI at he gild rather fasten his hopes' 'for.• world the ?ion.' W. G. Marten, Provincial• Minister, o$ Public Weliaree at the. awe. nual .meeting of ,the Bay Scouts As sociation of Ontario,: This Week's, Scout Law=NO ,2 • t A Scout is • loyal to the; King, his cometry, his officers, his parents, his -employersandeto=tl o,9e 4nndeu hlm where they *elate ley ,ont plante tiens • Loyalty is' one of The foundations of which will be the foundation of•'a• large' good citizenship. • No organization of • Boy :Scout Forest' Already some • oY many sort, ' front a Government iiown-• - the trees, planted several years' ego,. are, growing' tato large Proportions: This- camp is :very popular; and only costs 'the boy his transportation . to, Angus and it may he that sone' Lonies mould like to attend this year. If so let,Iieidquarters•know,: as soon as' pos- 'sibie, So, that ' arrangements can he. made to include. you. English SCoute May Visit Canada • projiferi?i-afoot-among Et , 'ham .Scouts and•.,Reeers to.organize a special 'troop and visit Canada this. snmmei'. If the •plan materializes the troop will lea`vd`i-Lsverpool in July and spend some fifteen days. in Canada: Lone scout Summer ;Camp wards, cap. be successfullyoperated unless it`n members are loyal. To be loyal means to adopt certain principlees andto stick to'them when you kno* they. •are right; . Loyalty is -a bulitrark thrown up against Life's' temptations: Therefore a . Scout is Loyal • to • his ake . .it country, that hh Ise may e1 p torp a better ,place to live in, to the Scout • Organ • r ization that hem ` ay get .the beat Prince George recently attended the •.hunter show at London and -ent-e# ii:;-to,�i� 'Parnnta ' whn have =preset '• �' : ' • h Qhb"-d .stallions . Luse Siaie7ns worked and sacrificed for him, thus cis shown receivingg the award for •his horse,' Ballynahinch.' °hyping, the 5th commandment, which, AS . Views ,CANADA Toronto's Bond Trtumpb ae Press, The' V! Stern Viewpoint • Saskatoon Star Phoenig The prairie Provinces have a vital in- Canada, as well as Toronto, has : terest in the Empire Eeonnmic An— reason. for congratulation over the ference this y -ear at Ottaga Tha al sgrption ofthe city's -new -415,2299,'- hulk Of .Canadian neporta to Br tails 000 loae in less than two hours: The have always 'eezn front„ the 'west: : success' of the ,I,otation indicates a wheat, livestock and farm. pr'dacta, • healthy state: of Toronto finance; and It is on the shipments abroad of tiles$ ,• it also suggests a degree of returning 'commodities that Canada's prosperity confidence whieh. should be •beneficial largely rests and the prosperity of. to •the: 'busine9e community. JiI Western► Canada depends oh them al-„ Singe it became impracticable last neat a'xclusively... autumn to enter. the New York Liar- :.ket for money; Canada has witnessed the disposalof several important bond - issues.:at bogie, .and • while it has been' feared. the .saturat'ion .int . nught; ' ?'ecently.. va;Zon Arany .•and- there s4eems' no dan- laved beneath the windows of Buck : soon L, reached, .•P ge on,?.that score 'as, let% -The` Globe'. inghaniPalace, and subsequent :ric:-, dents revealed the kindly and wntenste (Toronto) i ForestPreservation _ �• •y human; diaraeter'of thi Royal 'etia= ' fly..., The; Queen `sent out •'a •tequest .Hav,.iii' returned from, 'a: three that the inuslcaan 'lav •hcr'favo s-' months' tour Of the• _chief European hili , "Jesus, Ll "over , of My Sq ' countries Mr.' Frank' J. pi Barnjium while his Majesy requested•"Sing' of is' more than ever convinced Of the r m „and "Silver Threads.Among, serious, world shortage, of W.ei. lie the•` Gold", Then the` leader of . the thinks that the British Enipire,: not - tend was invited into• the` palace and withstanding its immense natural re- , intiod'eced, to nieinbe s of the '"'amily sources •of.' other, kinds, is weak in circle. - ' ..this respect, and he makes.. the fol- Nothing Wonderful about this, may lowing suggestion:. • ., , .• be the'comment of the supercilio'.is "Our governments could not make a critic of all . such f human. incide its, wiser or more necessary move than, to But there is. Here' ere the hereditary serve as, .a reserve, as i. g not ' ase and d concf a vast•'E'm are, ]ung, arch•rulersP P, every 'acre of forest within the,Ern- far the latest an •popular mqsic • •bet SS� THE EMPIRE, True Nobility Ther+r has heels .quite a lot of,'in- - ,terest -shown . 'in the proposed Lone Sc..R ut-Camps and this-oneorttinity_far Lonies tie get, together : and work and play. under the, supervis%n of••expere encedScout leaders should' not be missed. , Similar camps were organ ized very successfully in 1929 • and. 1930, and if there is 'sufficient encour- fIagenient'to'carry the, matter dthrough, feasor Clark satd> here••came a4 strange that he ma obtain rence—the invasion of the St. to his employer y FoY' fits n� occur 1" eT"; � , rid Moth � says `Bonor Thy Father a .. • , the• best results from his labor; • and to those •over whom 'he• has .control: that .• Lawrence lowlands, .the Ottawa Valley, `a Fl$ . Lake . Cham' lain and Lake' .Ontario by Of N� p the in tern' may honor ' and be loyal ' y the sea 'due to the depression oY the • Lone Sco crust of the • earth: 'At Montreal the Ms;GIlScientist.'Believes;Land' ore ata resent ]n ;a recent issue of On Lone Scout Trails" particulars were : given ®f a takes Flow Back' To- a• draining. off, leaving, however, abufad- ant trace Of the presence oY the .aea Lone Scout Dog Show.'. This, in facts, wand Mississippi there. =At 'that time, he said, the lakes is theoret cal,•as the boys' cannot'pring .' Montreal.=The eventudi :disappear-. runt fo and, puri their' degs to any central spot for"judg asumed., their p fin► . ance..of Nia ra Falls was.predfcted by' ing, but they are required to,write an • Professor T A. "Clark, professor of "t1 Tmhe ossibility of a 'reverse tilting essayand send. pictuees of their dogs,' ,paleontology at ideOill Uni p the came P ut. dogsfiow sea was,a6Z5 feet ab P -. Ti�j Ing May Tllrili Gres#,-•- level.—Retllting o this crust brought versity, an a beingnow in progress was suggested. will robably be he a, or from Which the judging was.none The • recent address here. ' This' would tend ,to spill-sthe waters' Park, near Brantford, Ont., during the winning essays wall be published m Professor Clarke's discussion of the of the lakes once more into the Mrs- .first two weeks .of .July. The cost. for this column at a' later date. ' "' Niagara laver came in the course y Membership in the Lone'Scouts 'is general survey of the.•history of .,the xis ' h?e're`they'once•found;an out- • the two weeks will' .prohabl he tenlet. Great Lakes; whose `discovery he term - .,and i v . T dollar,, the Scout will have .to pro- ___�_ Ie its -own transportation to and • from the camp. Any Lone Scout interested 'should communicate at once with Headgnart ere, and :start saving his nickels now! Boys Aid Firemen In. Dominion • Contest open to a bays Froin 12 to 18 years of Age inclusive,: who are not able to join. -a. Regalar' Boy. cou root . It- is, particularly' designed to give • boys who ive oa Rural Routes, or in small villages, , an opportunity to take • ad- vantage of the Scone Programme. I ;' For *fill particulars, write to ;Th'e: Scouts'are • credited Lone Scout' Department; Boy •Scouts Hamilton, t James With helping his., , department Win. the 193041 Dominion —Lone_ E. • • : AthletesKeep Trim For the Olympics Busy Season ,Assures. Entrants. Will Be In Good Foran' The sports- world s in the throes. • of a -busy season this year. The winter OLympies are over. The indoor track' season has been • illumined by the brilliant perform; sneeze of Venzke, Spitz, Lermond, Sex- ton, McCluskey,; and their' fleet, agile comrades. But more is to come. Outdoor track meets -in plenty will tbrill'-the fans;. and ahead, as a climax, is the prospect of the Olynipic games in Los Angeles in Augt:st.. But before this, the . world's big sorts show, there are the numerous tryouts. ' . • . These in . general, will .follow the college track season and will be so distributed over the country as to give ever hinted "Has George mar- riage toYou?' "Only once, coming home from thetheatre the other night, he •Iaughed and said that anyway two could ride in' a taxi as cheap as one." an -can he-olltmined-at-a-re -or he clehymns said -a iengethst-fias been familiar r m • than 'a gena - tion --The Globefo,Toreoronto) ireland,and the Empire ;, hondon ,1liorning. •Post. (Cone.).: ire. Irish are to be driven out of their Imperial heritage by their country- men ountrymen in Southern Ireland it Will be their great 'loss 'and misfortune. They cannot -well , have it bothways. . If. `the_y" ,are -citizens-ofea- epublic;-they cannot at the, same time be British subjects. Their loss, we fear, in taw hard times will be•looked upon as gain by many of our native British`n ti- wt of employment: It is altogether a ery complicated and regrettable 'posi- tion. If . the severance comes, bosh countries will stiffer heavily thereby bait it 'seems to; us.. 'that`: the Irish will' suffer' . such more 'heavily on balance Le D • ', ir, Montreal •(Ind.):: Recent ever' than the British, since they will , able figure. The present time. is the best: and last opportunity' that will occur to'" purchase forest- lands nt a res- moderate'price: Owing to the d, sign; land containing mature ,ti'mber can be Purchased in Canada today for a trifling advance over the cos of planting young,.seedlings. Contrd• of a majority of the remaining , available' wooded_ •areas,.�..3v_ith • the enormously advancing values . which • are hiN very shortly to ' Decor, n ould give the Empire • greater' prestige than .control of . the gold supply, for no .,amount: of gold canreplace forests within the =ife- time of two general ens, noir the few thousands of acres of our remaining big trees in' 15' generations: '—'The Mail & Empire •(Toronto).. • The industrialization of Canada ed one of ;the. most absorbing •subjects • ; a s : tisties show that the• Indus thenceftrth be' aliens in • a country to the student of. North Amer%an his=—! eC1 -- aur' roritces=is con d -Empire -which -they -have -long -re-. tory" A few of the geologic keys to • C 7 %J3' Fax finial ie:g b New Carry' •. s transport T:" '>u bout the � country yarded' as their home from - home. the secret of.time mere':displayed for York: American air'tra Po ore ttan 53 per cert:, of our papule-, The "Defepce�' of Paris inm the benefit of his audience. lines .experienced the busiest Year tion ;ivies le the'tuwns:,, In• Ontario Changeless as the Great Lakes seem, their history during 1931, with marked : + �• nlatio i lives . Manchester Guardian•.(Lib.) The 61 per cert of he pop uthorities of Paris are preparing when looked at through the eyes of gains ,in passenger, mail and express intim urban centres.. In our province' the iaiyman. they all show' constant traffic, according to. a report made pnT►- .elaborate: plans `oar the defence of the the proportion ..is. 63 per cent., as. cityagainst aerial bembarilmeiit. rhe Change :to him, forehis the are lie T d 'tly by the Aeronautical Cham- a • st 56 per cent. 1321 This � French public as 'never left for �o'tg ogres a en in a • framed in an .unlimited time, and with ber of Commerce of America. „ means ` that practically two-thirds of the yardstick of thousands of• years ' . "With 730 airplanes 4ii� service, thewithout some reminder of the "immin- the lecturer •fneasured ori thea line' of major American'lines reporting to the ooh retale live: in towns third Montreal Int" danger' of attack from Russia, or 7 -where ' more.than' a of the the rivers and 'lakes of eastern Can- Aeronautical Chamber of CommercetI1 t• f the province resides--- Italy, or Germany. The real danger, ada. carrier 457,753 passengers, 9,351,195 The ancestry of the present St. Law- pounds of mall, .and 885,164 pounds of rence • was traced. to a main stream express in 1931;" the report said. "This: which started in "the present bed .of volume of trate can he compared with Lake Michigan, moving thence'via 385,910 passengers, • -i13,75 pounds of • Georgian Bay to Lake Simcoe : and mail and 286,798 pounds of express in Lake Ontari'o•` whence it followed` 1930, the' previous. peak year." pop a ion o unless, provoked by France hervI , Quebec, Verdun Three Rivers, Bell, .covet in the present $tate !►f the Saint' Hyacine, .ens. Pia^fleshy • a` world, be extremely slight.' it, nthe third of the• population remains on. the chaps still re the duty of the War land. Such a state of affairs'froni perhaps Department, or the new Ministry for" all points'of view is unsatisfactory;. National Defence,to envisageit: and. the, movement. toward the towns, if it has declined since the h'sginning of to guard against: it. But this con much, "tile .same course as it does to - Might Hear Some Soup slant harping in public on the hkeh -1 the economic crisis, is still far from hood of France's`bein attacked is not day. The• river' was, however, much Stream Flow in the • being stopped. Undoubtedly with g ,' presence' then, for soundings 'show the .. i , ro- calculated to increase that feeling of I Maritime Provinces •modern methods of -agriculture p security 'which the French . ,Govern - presence' of a submerged channel gut- duction and with. the evalntion of ting through the banks and falling ori The. Dominion Water ' ower and crop's' there is not the same need for. went professes, so earnestly to desire. , � into deep water south of Newfound- • Hydrometric Bureau of the Depart land, said the lecturer. Near its mouth anent ot the interiorn•reports that the it received a tributary from the north, month of January was unusually mild whose only modern evidence • is the in the Maritime 'Provinces and that, Strait 'of ;elle isle. i as most of the precipitation odcurred here as no Niagara Falls thea,' in theerin o rain, laborers on the land as there used to. • OTHER -OPINIONS , ` be, but here is still a complete -World • to develop''and .populate, that of the Th'e Prince's Popularity. new territories and colonize t`!en • re- • . Prince• of . Wales calls . his "debt" tq - Brooklyn Eagle: But what. the 1 f f in the run-off was glans. but at the extreme end of Lake Gee above the long term average. In'Nova ' Sack to the Land t tAiron h a' gap is the Niagara es- Scotia the run -oft was about 30 per i e Droit, Ottawa (Ind the press is due to the press of the. silo, g : If the whole world.. Does his borne throw carpment'.;a tributary Stream draining cent. above .the January mean and was back to the land movement• has been him, as any•man's •horse might? r,ym- the presenit region of Lake Erie flowed heaviest following rains and thaws many, times proposed as a remedy for pathy is stilled by newspaper storied into the Laurentian River. The types during the middle of the month. ,In unemployment, it goes without say- from Melbourne to, Paris. 'Does he of animal'' which we knew to -day in a 1*e'w Brunswick • the run -of[ was about. Ing that the opening of ne* lands plan to teach his nephews the manly • wild state probably saw this work of. art of self-defence? South Africa and nature, but it was prior to any human Canada and the United States get all life on this continent, the lecturarr.a�•..five days of the month followed by off the details. Does' he isstie•s •fervent served. Then came •the Glacial 'age, high fiows,as the. weather turned mild appeal to British patriotism? The am peal, textually primed, reaches all. readers• of the English language. Comnionly he shows rare common sense in -chat he says 'and what he does. , Publicity never hurts hint. ' The Sliver'Lining y ' Boston Christian Science Monitor: f The ten-year, deflation of agriculture • has resulted in -losses running into the billions, Some estimates run as irgh ' as ,$40,0'00,000,000. On the•face of it, one would assume that recovery must be painfully slow. That does not nec- essarily,follow.. A .great iiad'sstriil concern which had its capital depleted to that extent would have to face the task of replacing a large part of that depleted capital out of. future • earn- ings. Agrichlture, although a great industry, is aii industry 'of small own- ers, and to a considerable extent of changing .owners. The greater.part of the billions lost in the agricultutai deflation has been charged Off. It is. beret, in the world, but if he lacks acre• the loss 'of the savings of the older' quate marketing facilities • he,,, can Jar generation•, and of holders .of faros never hope to make any.. money, nvrtgages. Those losses will hot hap": ti, be recouped. before agriculture can The Imperial Conference recover. 1liost of therm are gone and Toronto Star (Incl. '.ib.) : 0 is to be never Will bereplaced.. Agriculture is hoped that some workable : plan of more completely liquidated than any 15 .per 'cent. above the' January mean alIn a fashionable r with lowflowduringthe first four or Olympic Al om cuts a chance to witness Olympic competition. multimillionaire' with no knowledge Perhaps the dates of some of these French and ao:desire to expose his • ignorance, •pointed• to a line on. the when this country resembled modern and rainy. TheLepreau river in south-, eventsro who be ofre aatey here menu ' are some of them, as listed by Las- me'au' and said to the wee#ter: "I'll have Greenland, which is still in the throes ern New Brunswick was swept c1Ear' of orate b! th of an iso period. 1 ice on Januaiiy 7 and remained free for rence Perry in. a Consolidated Press it Accompanying th 1 stages of ten days• --an unusual circumstance at dispatch: estaurant a new and the. clearing of them, with the establishment of, farmers'or, the sons armers in'new countries; would be no less efficacious. This is the work that j follows on colonization. • Joint Effort a On dune 24-29 the track and field •" athletes of the East will hold a tryout in Harvard Stadium at Cambridge. Rowing tests for all but eight -oared ores will be held on the Schuylkill River at Philadelphia, duly 1-4. Chidago will be the scene gf ,the •semi-final Eastern track and ' field 'trials on July 8-9. On the same dates the Western semi-final tryouts will be head at Long Beaoh, California. Cincinnati wilt see the final swim- ming test for men on July p4-17. , Gymnasts who aro to represent that United States at Los. Angeles will be rieledted in a final meet in t ew York Oity on July 15. • On July 15 the final track, and fir try outs will be staged. at Palo Alto. July 15-16 will see the holding' of the final bnxing trials at Ciii sago. Pacific Coast yat�hts will sail trial races at Los Angeles July 16-26..And there, also, en July 23 the finals Id turablir.g, °rope -climbing, and Indian clubs will be held. Diving finals and final e+ents in ' Water -polo go to Pasadena, July 18- t 23. • Fieel yacht -h g tont will be herd on the Los Angeles course July 23-27,1 and at this time the final road -cycling 1 will be 1-.1d r•n the Olympic • �" "I'm sorry. sir," replied the 'waiter, but the band is playing that now." • • e closing . ice occupancy of the lake region, Pre -1 this season. "People don't et.et for gerwerntnent. 'The gevernmefit exists for the bea•ett of• the lieopTa. - •ilfaffa Bili". Murray. Dominions Secretary Enjoys Motor Show •i: elnr•.,t+i,,r,‘.• �•t einem;• J. H. Tho*.as, now Y)otnfr,iv±s. Secretai°v. in the Natienal goreri anent; for .. x• <:i t i- d'1t,adj -: ,( at duce• blunself With 'tee 2 ,tui'atutr. modeIS at Crystal Palace in len- a ...rr,•nt f d.. .4. effetely i' r • • Windsor Border Cities Stai (Ind.) : Mr. -Charles Forester, division super-. intendent of the Canadian ' National Rails -s addressing 'a meeting of the Ontario Onion Growers' Co-Oparative Society at Leamington,• says thet the outstanding success Which has attend- ed the tale of the Western Ontario onion crop through co-operative effort should induce growers to :apply the sante method to the disposal of corn, tomatoes, :fruits, vegetablesand other products of the farm. fir. Forester is right, of course. The agricultural industry isnever coming into its own, it will.never extract the fTli and le- gitiniatc benefit of its labor and in- vestment, until such time as the men on 'the land learn the lesson that there is much more to farming than the actual growing of ' the goods. One tray .produce the best i otatoes or to- closer . trade • co-operation between, 'Canada and Great Britain may em- erge times, fr-.n3 the conference at Ottawa r d 1 'd during the ening ummer, but lib matter what the conference may do- "It is as easy for the mind to think tide upon one may' feel assured Can- in Stars 'as In coh1ilestones."—Helen Ma will ceiitinue tr ekercise control teener.' c f her own fiscal policy and will con- tinue to advance as she can as an in- "The, • basis of our Burol ean•Ameri- dustrial nation—utilizing her ottn ran civilization Is critically shaken"-+ - rat* materials xs much as possible.. Albeit Einstein:, other industr}',. and; with the conning ofbetter itn s, its, recovery will becog esp*n ingy rapid.